
So, how the hell do I get a good clean white paint job??

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Tamiya thins best with their thinner or some isopropyl alcohol.Bellerophon wrote:White's the worst.
Somewhat OT 'cause you're talking about spraying gloss, but I recently had occasion to brush-paint flat white acrylic. I had the best results with Polly Scale. It went on smooth in a thin even coat that didn't show much of any brush marks. Tamiya and Testors were both giving me trouble--too thick, too much surface tension, poor adhesion to the substrate (Tamiya primer), and both curdled when thinned with a little distilled water. As if they were past their shelf lives, but they were pretty new jars of paint.
It gets even freakier when you learn you can also thin Tamiya with lacquer thinner.Bellerophon wrote:I keep forgetting that Tamiya doesn't brush well--especially flat white and flat black. Even on small parts like landing gear struts. I keep both distilled water and isopropyl rubbing alcohol handy for thinning acrylics--it's hard to remember which paint reacts best to which thinner. Maybe I should put notes on the bottles.
But Polly Scale does brush well, and it's possible to eliminate brush marks by laying down thin coats, almost like drybrushing.
I have yet to try Gunze or Vallejo, and never even heard of Gaianotes.
Both Mr. Color & Gianotes are lacquer based. Tamiya and some Testors can be converted to lacquer based by thinning with lacquer thinner. Lacquers are great to airbrush provided you have enough ventilation. IIRC Tamiya rattle cans are lacquers.Wug wrote:If you want to use lacquer, Mark S. Gustavson and Robert A.Wick have a great guide here:
http://user.xmission.com/~msgsl/GSL/doc ... hicles.pdf
Mike